No matter what happens, the state of Indiana is a winner in Sunday night's
final. Notre Dame and Purdue, schools only 107 miles apart, will play in the
first in-state final in the 20-year history of the tournament.

Notre Dame forward Kelley Siemon said she's seen "Hoosiers," the true
story of a small-town Indiana high school team that won the state championship
in the 1950s, "a ton of times. But not as many times, I'm sure, as Ruth has."

The 6-foto-5 Ruth Riley, the only Indiana product on the Notre Dame roster,
is the Associated Press Player of the Year.

Purdue (31-6) has more of a local flavor, with five in-state players. That
includes All-American Katie Douglas and fellow starters Kelly Komara and
Shalicia Hurns.

The Irish advanced to the final for the first time in school history,
erasing a 16-point first-half deficit to beat defending champion Connecticut
90-75. That's the biggest comeback in women's Final Four history.

Purdue, the 1999 winner, shut down the Jackie Stiles show, holding the
nation's leading scorer to 22 points in an 81-64 victory.

Stiles, who set the NCAA career scoring record earlier this month, entered
with a 30.6-point average. She was held to seven points in the first half as
Southwest Missouri (29-6) fell behind by 17 points.

"You never want something as good as this to end," Stiles said. "You
never prepare yourself for this moment."

Adding more flavor to the championship game matchup is the way the teams got
to this point. Notre Dame swapped the No. 1 rating with Connecticut during the
regular season. Purdue is ranked ninth and advanced as a No. 3 seed from the
Mideast Regional despite winning the Big Ten regular-season title.

Many viewed the UConn-Notre Dame game, a battle of top seeds, as the true
title game.

"Everybody's probably counting Purdue out," said Douglas, who had 25
points and seven rebounds. "We like being the underdog. Keep making us the
underdog because we've been successful so far."

McGraw wanted to play down that angle.

"At this point, the national final, I don't think either team is the
underdog," McGraw said. "I think it's just two great teams going at it."

This will be the 13th meeting between the teams, and Purdue leads the series
9-3. But Notre Dame won this season's only matchup, 72-61 at home Dec. 9.

"They're a much better team than they were in December," McGraw said.
"Hopefully, we are too. I think it's going to be a great game."

The teams have met twice in the NCAA tournament, with each team winning
once. Notre Dame prevailed in the first round in 1996 and Purdue won in the
Midwest Regional semifinals in 1998.

Notre Dame's Niele Ivey had 21 points and Riley rebounded from a poor first
half with 18 points and seven rebounds. Riley got two early fouls and was
limited to 12 minutes in the first half, getting only three points and one
rebound.

"We just decided to come together and do it," Ivey said. "We had 20 more
minutes regardless of what the score was. It was 0-0 coming back out there."

Ivey sprained her left ankle and was on crutches after the game. McGraw said
Ivey would not practice today, but Ivey said she'd be fine.

The Irish shot 57 percent after the break and finished 8-for-11 from 3-point
range for a surprisingly easy trip to the final. They've had only one close
call in the tournament, an eight-point victory over Vanderbilt in the Midwest
Regional final.

Notre Dame held freshman Diana Taurasi, who had been carrying Connecticut
lately, to 1-for-15 shooting.

"We definitely were keying on Taurasi," McGraw said. "We thought about a
box-and-one, but she missed some shots at the start and we decided to take our
chances."

Douglas and Camille Cooper, who were starters on Purdue's 1999 title team,
starred in the semifinals. Cooper had 16 points and 10 rebounds, her seventh
double-double of the season.

Purdue had one of its most dominating inside performances of the season, and
the best by far in the tournament, against Southwest Missouri State. The
Boilermakers had 21 offensive rebounds, scoring on numerous second chances, and
had a 47-29 overall advantage.

Rebounding hadn't been a strong suit earlier in the tournament for Purdue,
which was outrebounded by UC-Santa Barbara and Louisiana State in the first two
rounds, were even with Texas Tech and had a 37-34 edge against Xavier.

"Our game plan was to face them and get them out," said Southwest Missouri
forward Carly Deer, held to two rebounds. "We kind of threw that out the
window.

"They are big and athletic, and, you know, we just didn't execute the
blocking out that we would have liked to have."